2012 AMC Junior With Answers
2012 AMC Junior With Answers
2012 AMC Junior With Answers
T H U R S D AY 2 A U G U S T 2 01 2
NAME
I N ST R U C T I O N S A N D I N F O R M AT I O N
GENERAL
1. Do not open the booklet until told to do so by your teacher.
2. NO calculators, slide rules, log tables, maths stencils, mobile phones or other calculating aids are
permitted. Scribbling paper, graph paper, ruler and compasses are permitted, but are not essential.
3. Diagrams are NOT drawn to scale. They are intended only as aids.
4. There are 25 multiple-choice questions, each with 5 possible answers given and 5 questions that
require a whole number answer between 0 and 999. The questions generally get harder as you
work through the paper. There is no penalty for an incorrect response.
5. This is a competition not a test; do not expect to answer all questions. You are only competing
against your own year in your own State or Region so different years doing the same paper
are not compared.
6. Read the instructions on the answer sheet carefully. Ensure your name, school name and school
year are entered. It is your responsibility to correctly code your answer sheet.
7. When your teacher gives the signal, begin working on the problems.
3. Yesterday it rained continuously from 9:45 am until 3:10 pm. For how long did it
rain?
(A) 11.1 (B) 16.8 (C) 8.31 (D) 24.1 (E) 24.8
5. The change you should receive from a $20 note after paying a bill of $9.45 is
(A) $10.55 (B) $10.45 (C) $11.55 (D) $9.55 (E) $10.65
(A) 99 + 2.01 (B) 98 + 3.011 (C) 97 + 4.0111 (D) 101 − 1.01 (E) 102 − 2.011
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8. The adjacent sides of the decagon shown meet at right angles and all dimensions
are in metres.
7
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8
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8 ...
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.........................................................................................................................................................
16
What is the perimeter, in metres, of this decagon?
5
9. If of the children in a choir are boys and the rest are girls, the ratio of boys to
9
girls is
1
10. By what number must 6 be divided to obtain as a result?
3
1 1
(A) 18 (B) (C) (D) 2 (E) 9
2 18
12. A jar of mixed lollies contains 100 g of jellybeans, 30 g of licorice bullets and 20 g
of bilby bears. Extra bilby bears are added to make the mix 50% bilby bears by
weight. How many grams of bilby bears are added?
13. A square piece of paper is folded in half. The resulting rectangle has a perimeter
of 18 cm. What is the area, in square centimetres, of the original square?
Clues
16 across is the reverse of 2 down
1 down is the sum of 16 across and 2 down
7 down is the sum of the digits in 16 across
What is 7 down?
16. I can ride my bike 3 times as fast as Ted can jog. Ted starts 40 minutes before me
and then I chase him. How long does it take me to catch Ted?
(A) 20 min (B) 30 min (C) 40 min (D) 50 min (E) 60 min
(A) 223 (B) 233 (C) 333 (D) 323 (E) 343
19. In how many ways can 52 be written as the sum of three prime numbers?
20. Four points P , Q, R and S are such that P Q = 10, QR = 30, RS = 15 and
P S = m. If m is an integer and no three of these points lie on a straight line, what
is the number of possible values of m?
21. A courier company has motorbikes which can travel 300 km starting with a full
tank. Two couriers, Anna and Brian, set off from the depot together to deliver
a letter to Connor’s house. The only refuelling is when they stop for Anna to
transfer some fuel from her tank to Brian’s tank. She then returns to the depot
while Brian keeps going, delivers the letter and returns to the depot. What is the
greatest distance that Connor’s house could be from the depot?
(A) 180 km (B) 200 km (C) 225 km (D) 250 km (E) 300 km
22. The square P QRS has sides of 3 metres. The points X and Y divide P Q into 3
equal parts.
P .........................................X .
..
.
Y ..
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Q
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S R
Find the area, in square metres, of XY Z.
3 1 3 1 1
(A) (B) (C) (D) (E)
8 2 16 3 4
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23. The product of three consecutive odd numbers is 226 737. What is the middle
number?
24. A Meeker number is a 7-digit number of the form pqrstup, where p × q = 10r + s
and s × t = 10u + p and none of the digits are zero. For example, 6 742 816 is a
Meeker number. The value of s in the largest Meeker number is
25. Four positive integers are arranged in a 2×2 table. For each row and column of the
table, the product of the two numbers in this row or column is calculated. When
all four such products are added together, the result is 1001. What is the largest
possible sum of two numbers in the table that are neither in the same row nor in
the same column?
26. This cube has a different whole number on each face, and has the property that
whichever pair of opposite faces is chosen, the two numbers multiply to give the
same result.
27. How many four-digit numbers containing no zeros have the property that whenever
any one of its four digits is removed, the resulting three-digit number is divisible
by 3?
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How many different shapes can be formed? (Shapes which are reflections or rota-
tions of other shapes are not considered different.)
29. Warren has a strip of paper 10 metres long. He wishes to cut from it as many
pieces as possible, not necessarily using all the paper, with each piece of paper a
whole number of centimetres long. The second piece must be 10 cm longer than
the first, the third 10 cm longer than the second and so on. What is the length, in
centimetres, of the largest possible piece?
30. Terry has invented a new way to extend lists of numbers. To Terryfy a list such
as [1, 8] he creates two lists [2, 9] and [3, 10], where each term is one more than
the corresponding term in the previous list, and then joins the three lists together
to give [1, 8, 2, 9, 3, 10]. If he starts with a list containing one number [0] and
repeatedly Terryfies it he creates the list
[0, 1, 2, 1, 2, 3, 2, 3, 4, 1, 2, 3, 2, 3, 4, 3, 4, 5, 2, 3, 4, . . . ].
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